Bardsea
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bardsea is a village in the Low Furness area of Cumbria in northwest England. It is two miles to the south-west of Ulverston on the northern coast of Morecambe Bay, and lies within the historic borders of Lancashire.
Bardsea was a small farming and fishing village well into the nineteenth century. It was accessed mainly by crossing the treacherous sands of Morecambe Bay. The church of Holy Trinity was consecrated in 1853: previously the area had been included within the parish of Urswick.
The area was also associated with the early Quaker movement; when founder George Fox married local landowner Margaret Fell, he took over Swarthmoor Hall and much of the land round Bardsea. There is an old Quaker burial ground nearby at Sunbrick on Birkrigg Common, where Margaret Fell was reputedly buried in 1702 (one authority suggests she was interred at the burial ground at Swarthmoor, although this is contradicted by other sources). George Fox himself was buried in London.
When iron ore mining and production led to industrialization in Furness, Bardsea became an important port, with steamers leaving for Fleetwood and Liverpool. This was shortlived, however, with the Furness Railway and Ulverston Canal taking business away from the village by the late end of the Victorian period.
Bardsea currently has two public houses, the Ship Inn a farm in 1750 and the Braddylls Arms, originally a coaching house dating back to the 1700s. Braddyll is a family name of landowners who traded in coal and iron ore.
Nearby locations of interest are the common with prehistoric Birkrigg stone circle, Sea Wood [1],the Manjushri Centre at Conishead Priory and Chapel Island used as a sanctuary when crossing the sands.